In comparison to single agent DOX, the combination of DOX-CDDP results in higher but acceptable toxicity. The response rate produced is significantly higher, and a modest survival benefit is achieved with this combination regimen, especially in patients with a good performance status.
Topotecan and paclitaxel have similar activity as second-line therapies with regard to response rates and progression-free and overall survival. We demonstrated that the two drugs have a degree of non-cross-resistance. Thus, there is a good rationale for incorporating these drugs into future first-line regimens.
Summary Rhizoxin is a new anti-tumour agent isolated from the pathogenic fungus Rhizopus chinensis. It has shown broad activity against murine tumour models and is also active against vinca alkaloid-resistant cells.
Ninety-one patients with poor prognosis non-seminomatous germ cell tumours (NSGCT) were treated with an initial intensive chemotherapy schedule. Suitable patients fulfilled one or more of the following criteria: lymph node metastases greater than 10 cm diameter; liver, brain or bone metastases; serum HCG level greater than 50,000 IU/L; and extragonadal primary tumours. Treatment consisted of 3 cycles of bleomycin, vincristine and cisplatin (BOP) administered at 10 day intervals, followed by 3 cycles of etoposide, ifosfamide and cisplatin (VIP) at 21 day intervals. A total of 64 patients (70%) achieved a complete remission. This comprised 46 patients who received BOP/VIP only, and 18 patients who received additional chemotherapy after BOP/VIP. Of these 64 patients, 51 underwent complete surgical resection of residual masses, including 11 in whom there was evidence of teratoma with cellular atypia or non-germ cell cancer in the resected tissue. A further 9 patients had persisting unresected radiological masses in the presence of marker complete remission. The overall response rate was 80%. Currently 57 patients (63%) remain alive and free from disease progression. The median follow-up period is 90 weeks (range 24-206 weeks), with a 2 yr actuarial progression-free survival of 66% (95% c.i. 55-77%). Major toxicity was myelosuppression, occurring during the VIP arm of therapy, with a median nadir WBC of 1.1 x 10(9)/L and median platelet count of 51 x 10(9)/L. Other toxicity included peripheral neuropathy (WHO Grade 2 and 3 in 22%). We conclude that treatment results with the BOP/VIP schedule in this poor prognosis patient group are at least comparable with other schedules, and toxicity is manageable.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Iproplatin (cis-dichloro-trans dihydroxy-bis-isopropyl-amine platinum [IV]; CHIP) was administered intravenously (IV) at monthly intervals at doses of 300 mg/m2 and 240 mg/m2 to ten previously untreated and 97 previously treated patients with advanced ovarian carcinoma. The overall response rate was 78% among patients with no prior chemotherapy, 42% among patients with prior chemotherapy not including cisplatin, and 22% among patients with prior chemotherapy including cisplatin. Overall response rates to iproplatin were 6.4% and 54% in patients with/without clinical evidence of tumor resistance to cisplatin. Thrombocytopenia was the dose-limiting toxicity, median time to nadir and to recovery being 2 and 4 weeks, respectively. Patients who had received prior chemotherapy regimens for greater than 1 year showed a 10% greater reduction in platelet count (mean platelet nadir +/- SD, 57.5 +/- 49.96 X 10(3)/microL) and a higher incidence of grade 3 to 4 thrombocytopenia after the first cycle than patients who had received prior chemotherapy regimens for less than 1 year (94.7 +/- 65.99 X 10(3)/microL) Moderate to severe vomiting and diarrhea occurred in 84% and 16% of patients pretreated with chemotherapy. Neuropathy (6%) was reported only in patients with prior cisplatin treatment. Mild and reversible renal toxicity was observed in 6% of cases. Iproplatin is an active drug in ovarian cancer; the results achieved in patients previously treated with cisplatin strongly suggest that the two drugs are cross-resistant.
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